RECENT ARTICLES – 2020

To meet the challenges of the 21st Century, traffic engineers and transportation planners need to think of streets as places and the foundation for community.

As more residents work from home—even after Covid-19—neighborhoods will include more variety in housing types and the way they are used. Part 2 in a two-part series.

As more residents work from home—even after Covid-19—they can choose where they live. Many will pick walkable neighborhoods where many people work out of their own homes.

In DIY City, the late Hank Dittmar makes the case for why small is beautiful when it comes to urban regeneration.

Arthur C. Nelson, of the University of Arizona, reports that preference for walkable communities and changing demographic needs will impact large-lot single-family housing. Changes in government policy are needed to avert a crisis.

Space & Anti-Space: The Fabric of Place, City, and Architecture, a new book by Peterson and Littenberg, should be studied by anyone who loves architecture and the city.

The city's Residential Infill Project is designed to promote missing middle and workforce housing.

Leon Krier, the 74-year-old architect who influenced CNU founders and designed Poundbury, has another major project in Southern England.